Is Mass Collection of Cellphone Tracking Data by the NSA Constitutional?
In ruling yesterday that cellphone location data are not covered by the Fourth Amendment, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit said its decision was limited to "historical cell site information for specified cell phones at the points at which the user places and terminates a call." The court explicitly did not address "orders requesting data from all phones that use a tower during a particular interval" or "orders requesting cell site information for the recipient of a call from the cell phone specified in the order." But given the court's conclusion that "cell site data are business records and should be analyzed under that line of Supreme Court precedent," meaning they receive only as much protection as legislatures decide to give them, it is hard to see why orders broader than the ones at issue in this case would implicate the Fourth Amendment. Suppose the National Security Agency (NSA), which has admitted that it maintains a comprehensive database with information about who is calling whom, when, and for how long, had a similar database containing the historical whereabouts of everyone with a cellphone. According to the 5th Circuit's logic, such a database would not raise any Fourth Amendment issues, because the information in it was voluntarily disclosed.
It is looking increasingly likely that the NSA does indeed have such a database or something like it. Back in May 2011, Reason Contributing Editor Julian Sanchez, a privacy specialist at the Cato Institute, speculated that the secret interpretation of the PATRIOT Act to which Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) kept referring had to do with "location tracking." Sanchez suggested that the Obama administration could be reading Section 215 of the PATRIOT Act (known as the "business records" provision) to allow mass collection of cellphone location data. After former NSA contractor Edward Snowden revealed the agency's dragnet of telephone metadata, Sanchez says, "I concluded I had probably guessed wrong," since NSA officials insisted that program did not include location information. But after reading Wyden's recent speech about the surveillance state, Sanchez cites several clues suggesting he was right after all.
As I noted last week, Wyden, a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee who is constrained by secrecy rules from explicitly discussing classified surveillance programs, implied that the full contours of the NSA's domestic snooping have not been revealed yet. As a result of Snowden's leaks, he said, "Several provisions of secret law were no longer secret, and the American people were finally able to see some of the things I've been raising the alarm about for years." Several and some, but not all. Sanchez points out that Wyden also said the secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC) decision allowing mass collection of telephone records under Section 215 was "as broad as any I have ever seen," implying that the court has issued at least one other ruling that was equally broad. What did that decision deal with? Sanchez notes that "Wyden explicitly mentioned location tracking no fewer than five separate times—discussing it far more frequently than [the] program we actually know about, involving bulk collection of call records." Sanchez argues that "his focus on location tracking…would be an inexplicable obsession if he knew that no such program existed."
If Sanchez is right, that means the FISC not only has agreed that Section 215 authorizes the indiscriminate collection of location data but that such a program passes muster under the Fourth Amendment, presumably based on the same sort of analysis the 5th Circuit used in yesterday's decision. As Wyden noted in his speech, this astonishingly broad reading of Section 215's requirement that the information sought by the government be "relevant" to a terrorism investigation makes all manner of records held by third parties vulnerable to mass collection:
The government can use the PATRIOT Act's business records authority to collect, collate and retain all sorts of sensitive information, including medical records, financial records, or credit card purchases.They could use this authority to develop a database of gun owners or readers of books and magazines deemed subversive. This means that the government's authority to collect information on law-abiding American citizens is essentially limitless. If it is a record held by a business, membership organization, doctor, or school, or any other third party, it could be subject to bulk collection under the PATRIOT Act. Authorities this broad give the national security bureaucracy the power to scrutinize the personal lives of every law-abiding American.
According to the "third party doctrine" that the 5th Circuit applied to cellphone location data, none of this surveillance implicates the Fourth Amendment. While we might like this information to remain private, the doctrine says, we cannot reasonably expect it will once we have voluntarily divulged it to a third party. As I mention in today's column, this notion that sharing information with others nullifies the Fourth Amendment met with spirited objections during the congressional debate over the Amash Amendment, which was aimed at stopping the NSA's mass collection of phone records. Rep. Ted Poe (R-Texas), for example, took it for granted that the government should need a warrant to compel production of telephone records:
Warrants need to be particular and specific about the place to be searched and the items to be seized. No judge would ever sign a general search warrant like the British did, allowing the police to search every house on the block, much less seize everybody's phone records. But this is what has happened under Section [215]. The government's gone too far in the name of security. The Fourth Amendment has been bruised. Rein in government invasion. No more dragnet operations. Get a specific warrant based on probable cause, or stay out of our lives!
If the Amash Amendment had passed, however, the government still would not need a warrant based on probable cause to obtain telephone metadata, or any other kind of "business record," unless Congress passed a law requiring one. Even legislators outraged by the NSA's invasions of our privacy do not seem to realize how vulnerable we are to government snooping as a result of the misbegotten and increasingly alarming third party doctrine.
Here is video of the Amash Amendment debate. Poe's comments begin at the 17:05 mark.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Do they care if it is constitutional?
I was going to ask the exact same question. Because at the end of the day, a piece of paper doesn't mean shit if they ignore it.
Only to the extent that the constitutionality (or lack thereof) determines how much they have to hide what they're up to.
If the President does something and gets away with it, it is both legal and constitutional.
A constitution is simply a set of fundamental principles and precedents according to which a state is acknowledged to be governed.
Provisions in old document titled "Constitution" are not constitutional if the political elite and their Supreme Court determine they are dead letters. It should be obvious that the entire Bill of Rights, except maybe for the 3rd Amendment, are dead letters.
At first I was afraid this would be a Chapman article in which he told us that it's totally constitutional. Stuff of nightmares (Chapman articles, that is).
Seven best words in the English language:
"Steven Chapman is on vacation this week"
/hyperbole...a little
OT: But is it art just because you hang it on a wall? Y/N/don't get me started!
Sometimes I hang things on the wall that are not art. But if I am correctly understanding the intent of your question, I say yes. I say that anything presented as art is art. Whether or not it is any good is another question. I find people saying "that's not art" to be very obnoxious as it usually means that they are using their own personal taste to define art.
Maybe I should have just answered "don't get me started".
Just did a word search on the US Constitution. Didn't find the phrase "third party doctrine" or "expectation of privacy" anywhere in there.
Contrived notions to water down the document and give more power to the gubmint.
By choosing to make cell phone calls, you are consenting to have your location tracked.
By choosing to fly, you are voluntarily consenting to an invasive search.
By choosing to hang out on a sidewalk, you are voluntarily consenting to a stop-and-frisk.
By choosing to buy on credit, you are voluntarily consenting to have your financial information scrutinized.
By choosing to breathe, you are voluntarily consenting to a chemical analysis of your exhalations.
We just need to stop voluntarily consenting to so much...
Pretty clearly the answer is "no", but there is that "unreasonable" weasel word in the 4th:
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
But the oft-forgotten 9th seems to cover the rest:
The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.
So, our persons, houses, papers, and effects, of those exactly which are we secure in? Not our persons ( stop and frisk, DNA collection) . Not our houses ( courts ruled no right to stop cops entering illegally). This third party rule means our papers and effects are fair game, so what are we secure in?
I'm sure shift weasel would simply change the meaning of 'secure' and tell me I am secure from terrorists in my person and home.
Shift weasel? Fuckin spell check...
sHiFt WEaSeL